| Literature DB >> 22374695 |
Alice M S Cheung1, Donna Leung, Shabnam Rostamirad, Kiran Dhillon, Paul H Miller, Radina Droumeva, Ryan R Brinkman, Donna Hogge, Denis Claude Roy, Connie J Eaves.
Abstract
Delayed recovery of mature blood cells poses a serious, expensive, and often life-threatening problem for many stem cell transplantation recipients, particularly if heavily pretreated and serving as their own donor, or having a CB transplantation as the only therapeutic option. Importantly, the different cells required to ensure a rapid, as well as a permanent, hematopoietic recovery in these patients remain poorly defined. We now show that human CB and mobilized peripheral blood (mPB) collections contain cells that produce platelets and neutrophils within 3 weeks after being transplanted into sublethally irradiated NOD/scid-IL-2Rγc-null mice. The cells responsible for these 2 outputs are similarly distributed between the aldehyde dehydrogenase-positive and -negative subsets of lineage marker-negative CB and mPB cells, but their overall frequencies vary independently in individual samples. In addition, their total numbers can be seen to be much (> 30-fold) lower in a single "average" CB transplantation compared with a single "average" mPB transplantation (normalized for a similar weight of the recipient), consistent with the published differential performance in adult patients of these 2 transplantation products. Experimental testing confirmed the clinical relevance of the surrogate xenotransplantation assay for quantifying cells with rapid platelet regenerative activity, underscoring its potential for future applications.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22374695 PMCID: PMC3358249 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2011-12-398024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113